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MISTAKEN IDENTITY? Invasive Plants and their Native Analogues An Identification Guide for Ives Road Fen Preserve While some invasive plants are distinctive and easily recognized, many others are difficult to distinguish from one or more species of our native flora. The result can be elimination of native plants that we want to preserve. This guide presents a side by side photographic comparison of the key characters helpful in confirming identification to allow you to quickly narrow down the possibilities. It covers invasive species at Ives Road Fen Preserve south of Tecumseh, Michigan but would have some applicability to other preserves in Michigan and Ohio. Each page has one invasive species and one or two similar native species. Photographs show key differences in such features as leaves, stem, fruit and flower. In some cases you get a bonus, such as a butterfly, with the photo. Bloom time and location information is given verbally. The remarks below the table discuss related invasives that are easy to distinguish. There are many more alien and invasive species not in this guide but most of them are easy to distinguish. Invasive Glossy Buckthorn (Frangula alnus) Thin, shiny leaves with entire (not toothed) margins. Leaves Bark Native Spicebush (Lindera benzoin) Location Wetland only Bloom June start Light green, dull and have rounded teeth. The plant only gets a few feet tall and grows in clumps. Alternat e, simple light green leaves. Buckthorn lenticels are longer horizontally than Spicebush. Buckthorn bark is grayer than the brownish Spicebush bark. Wood Native Alderleaf Buckthorn (Rhamnus alnifolia) Spicebush lenticels tend to be smaller and rounder than the buckthorn lenticels. The bark is a little browner than buckthorn bark. Buckthorn wood is orange-yellow when cut. The bark is dark brown with no white lenticels. Spicebush wood is white with a slight greenish tinge. If you accidentally cut it, don’t treat the stump and it will grow back. Wetland only April The wood has a slight yellowish tinge. Wetland only June Invasive Narrowleaf Cattail (Typha augustifolia) Leaves Native Common Cattail (Typha latifolia) Leaves are up to ½” wide. Up to 1” wide. Flowers Location Bloom The male flower containing the pollen (top part) and the female flower (bottom part) have no gap between them. By the end of the season the part of the stalk where the male flower was will be bare. Wetland June Wetland June Invasive Hairy Willow-herb (Epilobium hirsutum) Leaves Stem The leaves are sessile (directly attached to the stem) and up to 1” wide. Native Fen Willow-herb (Epilobium leptophyllum) The leaves are less than ¼” wide. The stem has opposite leaves and is up to 6.5 feet tall. Northern Willow Herb (Epilobium ciliatum) The leaves are up to ½” wide. The stem has alternate leaves and is up to 5 feet tall. The stem is up to 3 feet tall. Flowers The showy rose-purple flowers extend from leaf axils near the top of the plant. Flowers are approximately ¾ inch across. Location Wetland Bloom July The white or pink flower with a long calyx tube is about 1/3" across. The white or pink flower with a long calyx tube is 1/6” to 1/3" across. Wetland Wetland July July In the preserve there is another invasive willow-herb which resembles Hairy Willow-herb except with slightly smaller flowers. There is another native willowherb which resembles Northern Willow-herb. Summary: Native willow-herbs have tiny flowers. Invasive Purple Loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria) Leaves Native Common Hedge Nettle (Stachys tenuifolium) The leaves are opposite and entire (smooth edges) The Leaves are opposi te and toothed. Stem The square stem is purple or green with opposite leaves and is up to 7 feet tall. Flowers The flowers are in thick purple spikelike inflorescences. All petals are the same shape. Location Wetland Bloom July Native Purple-Fringed Orchid (Plantanthera psycodes) There are 2-5 leaves sheathing the stem, gradually reduced to bracts higher up on the stem. The round stem is up to 2 feet tall. The square stem has purple blotches with opposite leaves and is up to 4 feet tall. The flower spike is 1-1 ½” in diameter. The flowers are about ¾” long. The lower petal forms a lip. The rose-purple flowers form an interrupted spike. The lower petal forms a lip. Wetland Wetland July July It isn’t hard to distinguish purple loosestrife but sometimes when we are spraying acres of it we develop a conditioned response to pull the trigger on every spike of purple flowers we see, especially if all we have seen for the last 30 minutes is Purple Loosestrife. Be sure before you spray. Think twice before turning loose an AmeriCorps crew with backpack sprayers. Summary: Purple Loosestrife is tall and has a thick inflorescence with all flower petals having the same shape. Invasive Musk or Nodding Thistle (Carduus nutans) Rosette Stem Native Swamp Thistle (Cirsium muticum) Smooth, not so deeply cut, with a white tinge on the ends of the lobes. Very spiny. The purple flower is 1 ½ -2” high. The heads nod. Location Upland and occasionally wetland Bloom June start Native Field Thistle (Cirsium discolor) The leaves are deeply cut and usually have a reddish tinge. The rosette leaves are deeply cut and have many spines. The stem is smooth. It is usually purple but sometimes green. Flower The stem leaves are loose, not very spiny, almost soft looking. The purple flower is 1 ½ -2” high and upright. Wetland only July The pale purple flowers are 1 ½ -2” high Upland only July Bull Thistle (Cirsium vulgare), another invasive, is similar to Nodding Thistle except that it has upright flowers. The other thistle you are likely to encounter, Canada Thistle (Cirsium arvense), is also invasive. It is shorter, more slender and has lighter colored flower heads than the three species above. Summary: Native thistles are less spiny and bloom a month later than the invasive thistles. Rosettes are harder to tell apart until you have some practice. Invasive Multiflora Rose (Rosa multiflora) Leaves Usually 7-9 leaflets, fringed stipules. Native Prairie Rose (Rosa setigera) Native Swamp Rose (Rosa palustris) The leaf has 5-9 leaflets and a long narrow stipule with revolute (rolled back) margins. Five leaflets on nonflowering stems, three on flowering stems, smooth stipules. Prickles Flower Prairie Rose has numerous white prickles near the bottom of the stem. They are stout and recurved, similar to Multiflora Rose. The prickles are numerous, stout and recurved. Older ones at the base of the stem are dark. Many white flowers about 1“ wide. Location Upland and wetland Bloom June start The lower stem has a few straight, slender prickles. The ends of the branches have none. Clusters of a few pink flowers about 2 ½ “ wide. Upland and Wetland July Clusters of a few pink flowers about 2” wide. There is a wide, flat pistil in the center of the flower. Wetland only July The other native rose on the preserve is Carolina Rose (Rosa carolina). It is short and usually on the edge of the woods. The other non-native is Sweetbriar (Rosa rubinigosa). It has pink flowers, grows in the upland areas and has very many prickles. There are only a few of them on the preserve. Multiflora Rose is being killed off naturally by rose rosette disease. It kills most of them in the upland and fen but is slow to reach some of the ones in the woods. Summary: Native roses have large, pink flowers, smooth stipules and bloom a month later than Multiflora Rose. Invasive Hairy Vetch (Vicia villosa) Leaves Stipules 7-12 pairs of leaflets and a terminal tendril that clings to adjacent vegetation for support. Native American Vetch (Vicia americana) 4-8 pairs of oblong leaflets and a terminal tendril. Stipules ¼” or less long. Flower , one-sided racemes. Location Upland sunny Bloom June-July Native Marsh Vetchling (Lathyrus palustris) Three pairs of leaflets and terminal tendrils. Stipules sharply toothed. 5-20 pairs of violet blue flowe rs, ½“ long, in dense Stipules half-arrow shaped. Bluish-purple flowers, ½ - ¾“ long, in a loose, few-flowered raceme. Upland edge of woods June 2-9 pink or bluishpurple flowers, ½ - ¾“ long in a long-stalked cluster. Wetland only June The other native vetch on the preserve is Carolina Vetch (Vicia caroliniana). The flowers are white or white with a bluish tip. It grows in the woods. I have never seen it. Crown Vetch (Coronilla varia) is a dangerous invasive not found on the preserve. There is a patch of it in a corner of a field just south of Comfort Road on the west side of Rogers Highway. It has flowers in a clover-like cluster (umbel). Summary: Invasive vetch has many blue flowers in a one-sided raceme and grows in the open. Invasive Native Native Garlic Mustard (Alliaria petiolata) Violet (Viola sp.) Golden Ragwort (Packera aurea) Leaves Garlic Mustard has kidney to heart- shaped leaves with large rounded irregular teeth. Location Woods Bloom May start The leaves are rounder than Garlic Mustard The basal leaves are egg-shaped or roundish, blunt-toothed and blunt-tipped. The petioles are and the teeth are smaller. somewhat purple. Woods and wetland May Woods and sometimes wetland May Motherwort (Leonurus cardiac) and Ground Ivy (Glechoma hederacea) have been mistaken for Garlic Mustard but they are also alien so it doesn’t matter if you accidentally spray them. Once garlic mustard starts to bolt it is easy to distinguish. It is only when leaves first start growing in the spring that it can be confused with other species.